Current:Home > StocksDick Moss, the lawyer who won free agency for baseball players, dies at age 93 -Elevate Profit Vision
Dick Moss, the lawyer who won free agency for baseball players, dies at age 93
EchoSense View
Date:2025-04-10 00:55:12
NEW YORK (AP) — Dick Moss, the lawyer who won the arbitration case that created free agency for baseball players and revolutionized pay for professional athletes, has died. He was 93.
Moss died Saturday at an assisted-living residence in Santa Monica, California, the Major League Baseball Players Association said Sunday. He had been in poor health for several years.
Hired by union executive director Marvin Miller as general counsel in 1967, Moss argued the 1975 case involving pitchers Andy Messersmith and Dave McNally that led to arbitrator Peter Seitz striking down the reserve clause. That provision for a unilateral one-year renewal had been included in every contract since 1878 and had enabled teams to control players by maintaining those agreements could be extended perpetually.
Seitz decided on Dec. 23, 1975, the clause meant only a single one-year renewal. The decision impacted all sports across North America and led to collectively bargained free agency in baseball.
“A titan of the industry. He impacted the industry at that time like few others,” said David Cone, a pitcher who was a member of the union leadership and a Moss client. “A bit eccentric, but very fun loving, just a gregarious personality, great guy to be around. Life of the party, a great guy to have a drink with.”
At the time of Seitz’s decision, the average Major League Baseball salary was just under $45,000. It rose to $76,000 in 1977 and by 2023 was $4.5 million, a 1,000-fold increase.
MLB’s revenues increased at a less steep rate, from $163 million in 1975 to more than $11 billion in 2023, a 70-fold rise.
“The difference between winning and losing was billions and billions of dollars, maybe tens of billions of dollars,” Moss said at a 25th anniversary party he threw in December 2000.
Baseball players’ gains were followed closely by other sports, with unions gaining liberalized free agency rights in the NBA in 1976 and the NFL in 1993.
Richard Maurice Moss III was born in Pittsburgh on July 30, 1931. He received degrees from the University of Pittsburgh and Harvard Law School.
After two years in the Army, Moss worked for for a Pittsburgh law firm, became a Pennsylvania assistant attorney general and in 1963 joined the United Steelworkers as an associate general counsel on a staff where Miller was assistant to union president David McDonald.
Miller was hired by the baseball union in 1966 and Moss joined him six months later. As Miller organized the players into a stubborn unit, Moss negotiated the first collective bargaining agreement in 1968, raising the minimum salary from $6,000 to $10,000. The 1970 agreement added grievance arbitration and the 1973 deal instituted salary arbitration.
“Marvin was really the perfect man for that time,” Moss told The Associated Press in 1991. “The players trusted him. He instilled confidence and respect in the players and he was something of a father figure to them.”
Players showed their resolve during strikes in 1972 and ‘73 and a lockout in 1976. A lawsuit by Curt Flood seeking to end baseball’s antitrust exemption lost at the U.S. Supreme Court in 1972.
The first big breakthrough came in December 1974, when Seitz ruled in an arbitration that Oakland had breached the contract of Catfish Hunter by failing to make a a $50,000 payment into a long-term annuity fund and he declared Hunter a free agent. The New York Yankees signed him to a $3.2 million, five-year deal, a sign of what players could earn without restrictions.
“Dick managed to win that case establishing something novel for baseball, the first real free agent who didn’t get there by being released,” said Donald Fehr, who worked under Miller and Moss, then headed the players’ association from 1983 to 2009. “The magnitude of the restraint was demonstrated.”
When Messersmith and McNally played seasons without contracts, the union filed grievances and Moss argued the cases before Seitz on Nov. 21 and 24 and Dec. 1, 1975. Seitz issued his decision on Dec. 23, ruling “there is no contractual bond between these players and the Los Angeles and the Montreal clubs, respectively. Absent such a contract, their clubs had no right or power ... to reserve their services for their exclusive use for any period beyond the ‘renewal year’ in the contracts which these players had heretofore signed.”
Seitz’s decision was upheld by U.S. District Judge John W. Oliver in Kansas City, Missouri, and the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. where Moss conducted the oral argument on the union’s behalf. Free agency rules were agreed to in the labor contract of July 1976, and the first free-agent class to gain riches included future Hall of Famers Reggie Jackson and Rollie Fingers.
Miller educated players on how to achieve their goals and Moss developed the legal tactics.
“Working in tandem was exactly what built the solid foundation,” said former pitcher Steve Rogers, a Moss client and longtime union official. “None of what is happening today exists without the solid foundation.”
Moss quit the union in July 1977 to become an agent, and his clients included future Hall of Famers Nolan Ryan, Jack Morris and Gary Carter. He negotiated Ryan’s deal for the first $1 million annual salary in 1979 and argued the case that got Fernando Valenzuela the first $1 million salary in arbitration in 1982.
In 1987, he helped expose owners’ collusive activities by giving the Chicago Cubs a blank contract for Andre Dawson, which the team filled in with a $500,000 base salary plus bonus opportunities. Owners lost three grievances and settled the cases with the union in 1990 for $280 million.
In 1992, he helped argue the grievance that led arbitrator George Nicolau to overturn Steve Howe’s lifetime ban, the pitcher’s seventh suspension for substance abuse. In both 1989 and 1994, he worked to organize a new league without ever getting teams on a field.
He is survived by his third wife, the former Carol Freis, whom he married in 1980, and a daughter from his second marriage, to Rolinda, Nancy Moss Ephron. Another daughter from his second marriage, Betsy, predeceased him.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
veryGood! (45897)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Coastal Flooding Is Erasing Billions in Property Value as Sea Level Rises. That’s Bad News for Cities.
- Kim Zolciak Shares Message About Love and Consideration Amid Kroy Biermann Divorce
- Lawsuits Seeking Damages for Climate Change Face Critical Legal Challenges
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- RHONJ: Melissa Gorga & Teresa Giudice's Feud Comes to an Explosive Conclusion Over Cheating Rumor
- Exxon Relents, Wipes Oil Sands Reserves From Its Books
- Hurricane Michael Cost This Military Base About $5 Billion, Just One of 2018’s Weather Disasters
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Trisha Yearwood Shares How Husband Garth Brooks Flirts With Her Over Text
Ranking
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- 5 Science Teams Racing Climate Change as the Ecosystems They Study Disappear
- Khloe Kardashian Slams Exhausting Narrative About Her and Tristan Thompson's Relationship Status
- Cost of Climate Change: Nuisance Flooding Adds Up for Annapolis’ Historic City Dock
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Enbridge’s Kalamazoo River Oil Spill Settlement Greeted by a Flood of Criticism
- Midwest Convenience Stores Out in Front on Electric Car Charging
- Democrats control Michigan for the first time in 40 years. They want gun control
Recommendation
Bodycam footage shows high
U.S. Marine arrested in firebombing of Planned Parenthood clinic in California
Study Finds Rise in Methane in Pennsylvania Gas Country
Regulators Demand Repair of Leaking Alaska Gas Pipeline, Citing Public Hazard
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
The Truth Behind Paige DeSorbo and Craig Conover's Confusing AF Fight on Summer House
10 things to know about how social media affects teens' brains
RHONJ: Melissa Gorga & Teresa Giudice's Feud Comes to an Explosive Conclusion Over Cheating Rumor